Coastal erosion and loss of coastal environments are worldwide phenomena. These typical processes occur on different spatial and temporal scales, from river basins to coastlines, and from the ocean-atmosphere system to the global climate scale. All climate change scenarios foresee an increase in the global mean sea level in the next century, from a few tens of centimeters to over a meter. However, these scenarios are not sufficient to explain the accelerating erosion that already occurs today. In coastal areas, such change appears to be linked not only to sea level rise as a direct cause, but also to changing climatic conditions (changes in the rain distribution, winds, sea waves, etc.) and to increased human pressure on land (excessive use of weirs and dams along watercourses, loss of coastal dunes and areas of protective vegetation such as mangroves, etc.). The case of Maputo is quite informative, as none of the known effects of climate change is the main cause of the significant erosion processes that occur there today. Rather, this erosion is attributable to an altered balance between the contributions of sediment from neighboring river basins and to certain effects of coastal dynamics.
Impacts of Ocean Dynamics, Climate Change and Human Pressure on the East African Coast: The Case of Maputo
Carlo Brandini;Massimo Perna
2014
Abstract
Coastal erosion and loss of coastal environments are worldwide phenomena. These typical processes occur on different spatial and temporal scales, from river basins to coastlines, and from the ocean-atmosphere system to the global climate scale. All climate change scenarios foresee an increase in the global mean sea level in the next century, from a few tens of centimeters to over a meter. However, these scenarios are not sufficient to explain the accelerating erosion that already occurs today. In coastal areas, such change appears to be linked not only to sea level rise as a direct cause, but also to changing climatic conditions (changes in the rain distribution, winds, sea waves, etc.) and to increased human pressure on land (excessive use of weirs and dams along watercourses, loss of coastal dunes and areas of protective vegetation such as mangroves, etc.). The case of Maputo is quite informative, as none of the known effects of climate change is the main cause of the significant erosion processes that occur there today. Rather, this erosion is attributable to an altered balance between the contributions of sediment from neighboring river basins and to certain effects of coastal dynamics.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.